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List of St. Anthony Hall Membersreport

  • Edward Forbes Travis (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • Charles Arms Budd (N.Y.U. 1850), medical doctor [1] (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • Charles Arms Budd (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • William Myn Van Wagenen (Columbia College) (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • John Hone Anthon (Columbia College), leader of the Apollo Hall Democracy, a political group that worked to bring Boss Tweed of Tammany Hall to justice. (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • Samuel F. Barger (Columbia College), Lawyer and railroad director and financier associated with the Vanderbilts.[3][4] (Founders of Alpha chapter)

  • John Lawson Stoddard, (1850–1931) famous lecturer and bestselling author of international travelogues. Theologian and poet

    (Writers) (Some notable members)

  • Thomas Nelson Page, (1853–1922) popular author and diplomat, US Ambassador to Italy, 1913 to 1919.

    (Writers) (Some notable members)

  • Harold A. Lamb (1892–1962) American historian, screenwriter, short story writer, and novelist. Columbia University graduate. Author of biography of Genghis Khan ( 1927)

    (Writers) (Some notable members)

  • Isaac Austin Henderson (1850–1909) Newspaperman and writer. Publisher New York Evening Post. Expatriate and Roman Catholic convert.

    (Writers) (Some notable members)

  • Christopher Grant La Farge (1897–1956) Novelist and poet

    (Writers) (Some notable members)

  • Paul V. Applegarth, Founding CEO, Millennium Challenge Corporation. Founding Managing Director, The Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • John Baptiste Bernadou (November 14, 1858 – October 2, 1908), officer in the United States Navy during the Spanish–American War. Namesake of the destroyer USS Bernadou (DD-153)

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Major General William Phillips Biddle (December 15, 1853 – February 25, 1923), 11th Commandant, United States Marine Corps.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Cecil Clay (February 13, 1842 – September 23, 1903) Medal of Honor Recipient, captain of Company K in the 58th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Robert P. De Vecchi, founder International Rescue Committee

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • John T. Downey, Judge, former CIA flyer imprisoned in China for over two decades

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • William Frederick "Bull" Halsey, Jr., GBE USN (October 30, 1882 – August 16, 1959), U.S. naval officer and the commander of the U.S. Third Fleet during much of the Pacific War against Japan. After joining and for the rest of his life, he carried the St. Anthony Hall emblem on his watch chain.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Vance McCormick, Appointed chair of the American delegation at the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, under President Woodrow Wilson. Member of the Yale Corporation 1913–1936.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Cornelius V.S. Roosevelt (1915–1991), (MIT Chapter) head of the CIA Technical Services Division and grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Elwell Stephen Otis (1838–1909), U.S. Army general who served in the Philippines late in the Spanish–American War and during the Philippine–American War.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • John A. 'Jack' Shaw, Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for International Technology Security during the first George W. Bush Administration.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • S. Frederick Starr, founder and Chairman of the Central Asia-Caucus Institute, and cofounder of the Louisiana Repertory Jazz Ensemble, dedicated to performing pre-1930 jazz New Orleans jazz.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Edward Stettinius Jr., (UVA Chapter). Administrated the Lend-Lease Program, through which Pan Am Airways made millions (see listing for Juan Terry Trippe under business section below). Stettinius served as Secretary of State from 1944 to 1945 under Presidents Roosevelt and Truman.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Strobe Talbott, former Deputy Secretary of State, President of the Brookings Institution. Yale Corporation member, 1976–1982.

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Luke Edward Wright (1846–1922) US Governor General of the Philippines (1904-1906), US Ambassador to Japan(1906 - 1907) Secretary of War ( 1908 - 1909)

    (Diplomacy and national security) (Some notable members)

  • Henry P. Becton, namesake of Henry P. Becton Regional High School, son of Becton Dickinson co-founder Maxwell Becton, retired Chairman of the Board, Yale Benefactor

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • George Herbert Walker IV, Managing Director, Lehman Brothers (and second cousin to U.S. President George W. Bush)

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Martin W. Clement, President, Pennsylvania Railroad Company from 1935 to 1948.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Robert Habersham Coleman, the Gilded Age "Coal King", scion of the family that owned the Cornwall Iron Furnace

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Harry B. Combs, aviation pioneer, oversaw creation of the Air Traffic Control system.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • William K. Lanman, aviator, benefactor

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Michael J. Petrucelli, Founder, Clearpath, Inc.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Juan Terry Trippe, aviation pioneer, founder of Pan Am, Yale Corporation member, 1949. A review of a Trippe biography "THE CHOSEN INSTRUMENT. Pan Am, Juan Trippe, The Rise and Fall of an American Entrepreneur Simon & Schuster said "Delta Psi was almost as influential as old Eli (referring to Yale). Mr. Trippe's wife, Betty, was the sister of Edward Stettinius Jr., a fraternity brother from the University of Virginia."

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Edward L. Ryerson, Jr. Yale Corporation member 1932–44. President of the steel service center Joseph T. Ryerson and Son, Inc. and Chairman of the board from 1940 until his retirement in 1953 of both Inland Steel and his original company. Namesake of one of two remaining straight-deck bulk carriers still part of the American fleet on the Great Lakes.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Frederick Ferris Thompson (1836–1899), prominent American banker. Helped found with his father and his brother Samuel the bank that survives to this day as Citibank, and with Jon and Samuel Thompson formed the Chase National Bank, named after their friend and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase which survives to this day as JP Morgan Chase.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Henry R. Towne, mechanical engineer and businessman (co-founder with Pin tumbler lock inventor Linus Yale, Jr. of the company Yale & Towne Lock Co.), one of the first engineers to see management as a new social role for engineers in his influential book "The Engineer as Economist."

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Frederick William Vanderbilt, philanthropist, Director New York Central Railroad

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • H. Walter Webb (1856–1900) son of Gen. James Watson Webb, a distinguished journalist who was at one time ambassador of the United States to Brazil. H.W. Webb was a railway executive for the New York Central Railroad under Cornelius Vanderbilt and Chauncey Depew.

    (Business and industry) (Some notable members)

  • Jay Carney, (former Time Inc. Washington Bureau Chief) 2012 White House Spokesman

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • George Crile III (died 2006) journalist most closely associated with his three decades of work at CBS News. Author of Charlie Wilson's War, the basis of an eponymous Tom Hanks/Mike Nichols film released in 2007 by Universal Studios

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Russ Dallen, Editor of the Latin American Herald Tribune

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Kuralt (died 1997), award-winning journalist, writer

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • John H. Lahr, American theater critic and prolific author, former senior drama critic at the New Yorker magazine from 1992 to 2013

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Lewis H. Lapham, editor of Harper's Magazine until 2006

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Andrew Levy, commentator, Fox News

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Stephen G. Smith, editor in chief of National Journal

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Loudon Wainwright, Jr., Editor of Life magazine

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Naomi Wolf, writer, political consultant, feminist

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Jonathan Yardley, Pulitzer Prize winner, book critic of the Washington Post

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Peter Gammons, ESPN commentator

    (Journalism) (Some notable members)

  • Alex Gibney, Oscar-, Emmy- and duPont-Columbia-award-winning film director and producer.

    (Media and entertainment) (Some notable members)

  • Jeff MacNelly, (1947–2000) three-time Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist and creator of the "Shoe" comic strip.

    (Media and entertainment) (Some notable members)

  • Eric Shansby, cartoonist for various American periodicals, including the Washington Post. His cartoons appear weekly next to humorist Gene Weingarten's "Below The Beltway" column.

    (Media and entertainment) (Some notable members)

  • Robert Adams Jr., Republican Representative from Pennsylvania 1893–1906 and United States Minister to Brazil (1889–1890)

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Joseph Wright Alsop IV, Republican Connecticut State Representative 1907–1909, State senate 1909–1913

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Charles F. Bachmann, Republican West Virginia State Delegate 1957–1960

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Joseph W. Bailey, Democratic Representative from Texas 1891–1901, House minority leader 1897–1899, United States Senate 1901–1913

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Risden Bennett, Democratic Representative from North Carolina 1883–1887

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Harry F. Byrd, Jr., U.S. Senator from Virginia, 1965 to 1983, newspaper publisher and businessman

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Thomas Clendinen Catchings, Democratic Representative from Mississippi 1885–1900

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Joseph S. Clark, United States Senator from Pennsylvania 1957–1969

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Ernest Cluett, United States Representative from New York 1937–1943

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Thomas C. Coffin, Democratic Representative from Idaho 1933–1934

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Lawrence Coughlin, Republican Representative from Pennsylvania 1969–1991

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Schuveldt Dewey, Republican Representative from Illinois 1941–1942, as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the 1920s, he was responsible for the redesign and downsizing of U.S. paper currency. He was the father of Yale Berzelius Secret Society member A. Peter Dewey, the first American to be killed in the Vietnam War, in 1945.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Charles James Faulkner, (1847 - 1929) United States Senator (Democrat) from West Virginia 1887–1899

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Hamilton Fish II, Republican Representative from New York 1909–1911

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Eric Garcetti, 42nd Mayor of Los Angeles, CA (2013–present). Los Angeles City Councilman (2001–2013).

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Albert Taylor Goodwyn, Populist Party Representative from Alabama 1895–1896

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • John A. Lile, Democratic Delegate, West Virginia House of Delegates 1953–1958

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Henry Martin, Democratic Representative from Oregon 1931–1935. Governor of Oregon 1935–1939

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • John Murry Mitchell, Republican Representative from New York 1896–1899

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Hernando Money, Democratic Representative from Mississippi 1875–1885

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Edward de Veaux Morrell, Republican Representative 1899–1906.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • James B. Murray, Democratic Delegate, Virginia House of Delegates 1974–1982

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Truman Newberry, Republican United States Senator from Michigan 1919–1922, Secretary of the Navy 1908–1909

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • James Breck Perkins, Representative from New York 1901–1910, historian

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • William S. Reyburn, Republican Representative from Pennsylvania 1911–1913

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Andrew Roraback, Republican Connecticut State Senate 2000 - 2008, Connecticut General Assembly 1994–2000

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Daniel Lindsay Russell (1845-1908) Governor of North Carolina 1897 - 1901 ( Republican)

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Francis W. Sargent, 64th governor of Massachusetts.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Willard Saulsbury, Jr., Democratic United States Senator from Delaware 1913–1919, Senate President pro tempore 1915–1919

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Walter Sillers, Jr. Democratic member, Mississippi State House of Representatives 1916–44; Speaker of the Mississippi State House of Representatives, 1944

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • D. French Slaughter, Jr., Republican Representative from Virginia 1985–1991

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • James Slayden, Democratic Representative from Texas 1897–1918

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Lawrence V. Stephens (1858-1923) Governor of Missouri (1897-1901)

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Gerry Studds, Democratic Representative from Massachusetts 1973–1996

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • William V. Sullivan, Democratic Representative from Mississippi 1897 – May 31, 1898. Resigned May 31, 1898 until elected to the U.S. Senate to fill vacancy, served until 1901

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • John V. Tunney, Democratic Representative from California 1965–1970. United States Senator 1970–1976. He was the inspiration for Robert Redford's character in the film The Candidate.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • J. Mayhew Wainwright, Representative from New York 1923–1931

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Malcolm Wallop, Republican United States Senator from Wyoming 1977–1995

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Richard Smith Whaley, Democratic Representative from South Carolina 1913–1921

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Hugh L. White, Democratic Governor of Mississippi from 1936 to 1940, 1952–1956

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • William Madison Whittington, (born 1878 died August 20, 1962), Democratic Representative from Mississippi 1925–1951.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Stewart L. Woodford, Lieutenant Governor of New York 1867–1868. Republican Representative from New York 1873–1874

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Nick Bain, Democratic State Representative, Mississippi. 2012 to present.

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Rounsaville S. McNeal, Republican State Representative, Mississippi (District 105). 2016 to 2020

    (Politicians and lawmakers) (Some notable members)

  • Fred Graham, chief anchor and managing editor of Court TV.

    (Law and the judiciary) (Some notable members)

  • J. Harvie Wilkinson III, Federal Judge, Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    (Law and the judiciary) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Clark, Chief Judge, Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

    (Law and the judiciary) (Some notable members)

  • Bill Carr, 1932 Summer Olympics 2× Gold Medalist in Track and Field for the USA

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Britton Chance, 1952 Summer Olympics Gold medalist in Yachting for the US, bio-chemist and bio-physicist

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Anson Dorrance, soccer coach, National Soccer Hall of Fame

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Truxtun Hare (1878–1956), 1900 Olympics, Gold Medal in tug of war event, Silver Medal for the hammer throw. 1904 Olympics, Bronze Medal in the Decathlon. Football All-American Team all four undergraduate years. Elected Football Hall of Fame in 1951. Professional career: Managing Director, Bryn Mawr Hospital and other philanthropy.

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Wendell Mottley, 1964 Summer Olympics Silver Medalist 400 m, Bronze Medalist 4 × 400 m relay (and later, a government minister) for Trinidad and Tobago. Mottley was the first person of color to join St. Anthony Hall, at Yale in 1961.

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Anne Warner, 1976 Summer Olympics First Yale College female undergraduate to win an Olympic Medal (Bronze, rowing)

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Thomas Scott, 1968 Summer Olympics Gold Medalist. Former professional basketball player who set the American Basketball Association record for highest scoring average in one season (34.6 points per game). Scott was the first person of color to join a fraternity at the University of North Carolina, in 1967.

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Josh West (born 25 March 1977.) Member of the British National Rowing Team who won two silver medals (2002 & 2003) with the British Four and one bronze medal (2007) with the British Eight at the World Rowing Championships. Represented Great Britain at the 2008 Olympics, winning a Silver in Rowing Eight.

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Chris O'Loughlin (fencer), 1992 Summer Olympic-fencing, Penn chapter, 1989

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Peter Daland. Longtime championship winning Univ. of Southern California (USC) Swimming coach. US Olympic Swim Team coach (1964 and 1972)

    (Athletics) (Some notable members)

  • Chester Holmes Aldrich (1871-1940) Prominent American architect. Partner in Delano and Aldrich. ( NY, NY) Director of the American Academy in Rome.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Winslow Ames. Art historian, author, professor at Connecticut College, and director of the Lyman Allyn Art Museum

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Samuel Breck Parkman Trowbridge, 19th- to 20th-century American architect, designer of the current New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Henry Rutgers Beekman (1880-1938) Artist, New York.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • C. D. B. Bryan. American author and journalist. Writer of the novel Friendly Fire (1976).

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • J. Cleaveland Cady 19th-century American architect, designer of the American Museum of Natural History on New York's Upper West Side, the now demolished Metropolitan Opera House, and his own St. A's Trinity College 'Epsilon Chapter' house (1878), a commission of fellow chapter alumni member Robert Habersham Coleman (listed above). Further chapter house data under architecture section of St. Anthony Hall.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Max Forrester Eastman (January 4, 1883 – March 25, 1969), socialist American writer and patron of the Harlem Renaissance, later known for being an anti-leftist.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • John Eaton, jazz pianist, originator of series "John Eaton Presents The American Popular Song" on national public television.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • S. Lane Faison, Art history professor who headed the art history department at Williams College from 1940 to 1969, several of whose students went on to direct major museums including Earl A. Powell III of the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, Glenn D. Lowry of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and Thomas Krens of the Guggenheim Museum in New York.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • William M. Griswold, Art historian, author, director of the Morgan Library & Museum (2008–15) and the Cleveland Museum of Art (from 2014)

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Robert Beverly Hale (1901-1985) Artist, curator of American paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art ( NY ), Art Instructor at the Art Students League of NY, author of several important books about drawing anatomy

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Robert Silliman Hillyer American poet, regarded as a kind of villain by Ezra Pound scholars who associate him with his 1949 attacks on The Pisan Cantos in the Saturday Review of Literature which sparked the Bollingen Controversy. Hillyer was identified with the Harvard Aesthetes grouping.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • William Hamilton Russell, (1856–1907), Partner in Clinton & Russell, founded in 1894 in New York City and responsible for numerous buildings there including the Beaver Building, Mecca Masonic Temple, better known as New York City Center, and The Langham Apartments.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Green Shaw (1892–1974), significant figure in American abstract art. Writer, illustrator, poet, modernist painter, collector. Shaw's archives in the Smithsonian Institution contain correspondence with Adele Astair, Clarence and Ruby Darrow, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John D. Graham, Anita and John Loos, H. L. Mencken, Robert C. Osborn, Cole Porter, Carl Van Vechten and Walter Winchell.

    (Arts and architecture) (Some notable members)

  • E. Otis Charles (born 1926), retired bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Utah. Dean of the Episcopal Divinity School in 1985. After his retirement in 1993, Charles publicly came out as a gay man, the first Christian bishop ever to take such a step.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Right Reverend William Croswell Doane (1832 – 17 May 1913), 92nd Bishop of the American Church and 1st Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Albany, from 1869 until his death in 1913. Founding member of Delta Chapter at Burlington (NJ) College founded by his father, Bishop George Washington Doane. (Chapter transferred to Penn within several years. College no longer extant).

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Betts Galloway, (1 September 1849 – May 12, 1909), prominent pulpit orator and Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, elected in 1886.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Robert Fisher Gibson, Jr., former Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia. Outspoken leader in the ecumenical movement, in the mid-1960s chairman of the Consultation on Church Union, which developed a plan to merge eight major Protestant denominations into a 24-million-member church. He also supported the movement to admit women to the governing bodies of Episcopal parishes.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Mark Hollingsworth, Jr., 11th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio. Founder of Epiphany at Sea, a program taking inner-city middle school students to sea on traditional fishing schooners.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • David Eliott Johnson (1933–1995), former Bishop of Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, the largest Episcopal diocese in the country. During his tenure Bishop Barbara Clementine Harris became the first woman in the church's history to be consecrated as a suffragan bishop.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • James Steptoe Johnston (1843-1924) Episcopal Bishop of the Diocese of West Texas (1888- 1916)

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Henry Steel Olcott (1832–1907), founder and first president of the Theosophical Society. First prominent person of Western descent to make a formal conversion to Buddhism.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Arthur E. Walmsley, Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut from 1979 to 1993. Active in defining issues faced by the Episcopal Church – posture vis a vis Vietnam War, revision of the Book of Common Prayer, ordination of women and gays, selection of the first women to become bishops.

    (Clergy) (Some notable members)

  • Ernest Kempton Adams, member of the Yale Chapter, scientist and wealthy namesake of fund established 1905 at Columbia University to bring distinguished European theoretical physicists and other scientists as visiting lecturers: Vilhelm Bjerknes 1905, Hendrik Lorentz 1906, Max Planck 1909, Wilhelm Wien 1913, Charles P. Olivier, Niels Bohr, Raymond Dodge, et al. Also the Ernest Kempton Adams Precision Laboratory at Columbia University.

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • James Brander Matthews (1852–1929), writer and educator. Matthews was the first U.S. professor of dramatic literature. From 1892 to 1900 he was professor of literature at Columbia, and thereafter held the chair of dramatic literature. His influence was such that a popular pun claimed that an entire generation had been "brandered by the same Matthews."

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • Stuyvesant Fish Morris, physician, nephew of Hamilton Fish.

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • Cyrus West Field Businessman and financier who led the Atlantic Telegraph Company, the company that successfully laid the first telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean in 1858.

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • Hamilton Fish II, Sergeant, 1st U.S. Vol. Cavalry, killed in battle June 24, 1898, at Santiago, Cuba (Spanish–American War). Grandson of Hamilton Fish, son of diplomat and banker Nicholas Fish. Not to be confused with Hamilton Fish II (died 1936). This H.F. charged San Juan Hill with the Rough Riders and is said to be the first American killed in the battle.

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • William McNeill Whistler (1836 -1900) American expatriot surgeon (London) and Confederate Civil War soldier. Brother of famous artist James McNeill Whistler

    (Other 19th century) (Some notable members)

  • E. Digby Baltzell, sociologist and University of Pennsylvania professor, St. Anthony Hall Delta Chapter (University of Pennsylvania), commonly cited as originating the term WASP, or White Anglo-Saxon Protestant.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Nathaniel P. Reed, Conservationist. Credited with passing the first Endangered Species Act. Former Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Fish, Wildlife and National Parks.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Alexander "Sam" Aldrich, Civil Rights leader in NY State. Former Chairman, President's Advisory Council on Historic Preservation.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • William "Bill" Backer, Advertising executive. Lyricist. Writer of the famous Coca-Cola jingle "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing".

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Peter Dechert, Photojournalist and author.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Edward Downes (1911–2001) American musicologist and music critic. Longtime host and quizmaster of The Metropolitan Opera Quiz on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts from 1958 to 1996.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Max Eastman, (January 4, 1883 – March 25, 1969), socialist American writer and patron of the Harlem Renaissance, later known for being an anti-leftist.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Charles Edison, Democratic Governor of New Jersey 1941–1944, son of the inventor, Thomas Alva Edison.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Tinsley Mortimer, New York socialite.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Michael J. Petrucelli, Deputy Director and Acting Director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services at the US Department of Homeland Security

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Amy Solomon, first undergraduate woman to register at Yale College in 1969.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • James Gustave Speth, Former Dean of the Yale Forestry School, co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Charles White Whittlesey (January 20, 1884 – Presumed date of death November 26, 1921), Medal of Honor recipient who is notable for leading the "Lost Battalion" in the Argonne Forest during World War I.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • Anthony A. Williams, Mayor of Washington, D.C. 1999–2007

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

  • V. Everit Macy (1871–1930), industrialist and philanthropist. Commissioner of Parks, Westchester County, NY. President of the National Civic Federation.

    (Other 20th century) (Some notable members)

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About This Tool

UH, St. Anthony Hall is a member of the American fraternity and literary society. Its 11 activity chapters have different names on different campuses, including the club of San Antonio, the club of San Antonio, the Delta Psi fraternity, the club of San A, the club of San Antonio and the sixth club. And continues to add to its ranks, this St. At one point, the Anthony Hall Society grew to 155 members of the random tool log.

UH, St. Anthony Hall’s first chapter was founded on 184717 January, at Columbia University on feast day in Anthony the Great. And through the generator, we can see members from different associations, each with their own characteristics and occupations. They include writers, diplomats, business people, journalists, celebrities, and politicians from all walks of life, including dates of birth and death, and chapter information.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of St. Anthony Hall members.

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